Billed as a "sitcom for the nineties" -- whatever that
might mean -- this was a fresh and funny series written by and starring
Nick Revell, who created The Million Pound Radio
Show with Andy Hamilton and wrote for countless television projects
from the early eighties onwards. In many ways, the set-up was fairly
conventional: the central character (who had Revell's own name, after the
fashion of American sitcom) was a struggling North London writer with a
selection of dysfunctional friends, a domineering agent, a sympathetic
barman, etc, etc. But what made The Nick Revell Show unique was that
Nick also conversed on a regular basis with Vince, a talking geranium who
lived in his flat. (In an interview, Revell once explained the presence
of Vince and his potmate Alvin, who also made the odd vocal contribution,
in the most prosaic terms, as a mere device to allow Nick to have conversations
in his flat without the liability of a flatmate to drag through the storylines;
in fact, the geraniums are probably more representative of Revell's penchant
for adding surrealist and magic-realist touches. This tendency also
made its presence felt in certain episodes of Drop The Dead Donkey, the Channel
4 TV series cowritten by Andy Hamilton and to which Revell was an occasional
contributor, and was given full rein in Revell's most recent radio comedy,
The House of the Spirit Levels).

Notable faces among the changing cast were Doon Mackichan
and Alistair McGowan as the bickering Dundonians Shona and Craig.
Two series were made. It might have been considered that the presence
of Vince the geranium rendered the show a strictly radio phenomenon, but
before long a TV pilot appeared entitled N7 (from the London postal code;
the name was changed because Revell did not actually appear, with the 'Nick'
role going to actor James Larkin). No TV series followed, in spite of
the magnificent performance of Phil Daniels as Vince.

Commercial releases: Two episodes from the first series were released
on the BBC Canned Laughter label.